folly...

Hello again!...there has been much coming and going this summer.  We had a couple of wonderful weeks with our little family all together in Vermont, got to visit with far-flung loved ones, have sent some of our group off to explore new scenes, have said goodbye to one very dear one, and have welcomed other loved ones into our home for a long wished for visit.  In other words, it's been a summer—a busy~time is flying by~lovely summer.  The views from here in the middle of the middle have been not at all unusual for this time of year. Mostly. I say mostly because of this bit of fun...
I love this little bit of homemade sunshine. We've been keeping an eye on it all summer, watching it grow and change, and delighting in the discovery of its mates-which have been popping up all over town.
  
...a folly, pure fun and full of exuberance and joy...
...truly a labor of love and generosity in our little midwestern town.  So thank you "Night Stocking", whoever you are (though I do have my suspicions),  I can't tell you how happy it makes me that yarn bombing has finally made its way to us.  This color never fails to bring a smile to my lips and happiness to my heart.

I hope you are enjoying your own lovely summer and that your days have been filled with brightness and handmade happiness!

~xox
alison 

There and back again...

So much has happened in the last week or two it feels like a blur.  There has been much coming and going here in The 'Castle, hither and yon.  First there was this happy journey...


...the much anticipated trip to retrieve my dear girl from her first year of college.  She did swimmingly this year and we couldn't be prouder of her, but that joy is completely dwarfed by the happiness that I feel over having her with us once again.  Sooooooo happy!!!!
After we got back from that whirlwind trip {22 hours of driving, packing and loading in 48 hours}, I was only home for a day before getting back on the road.  This time to Columbus, Ohio for TNNA.
Aaaaaahhhh...this is the entrance to the convention hall {a mecca of sorts for yarnies} where I spent three busy, blissful days among gorgeous yarn with lots of incredibly talented and serious knitters {and when I say serious, I mean many of my idols in the knitting world were there. Can I tell you how difficult it was difficult keeping one's composure with all of those big time designers roaming the halls?}.
This was my first time to visit any kind of trade show, it was an absolute blast, and I owe it all to the lovely Brandy and Allegra of Petite Purls.  I was lucky enough to go as a designer for Petite Purls {maybe you remember this and/or this?} along with my roomie, the talented Angela Tong, whose darling Mao was included in this summer's issue.  Here you can see the lovely Brandy, coding away before the big release of the Summer 2011 issue {they put the final touches of the issue while at TNNA~it was a thrill watching these talented women work!}...
 By the way, if you haven't seen the new issue, you should pop on over to check it out.  Brandy and Allegra have really outdone themselves with this one.  It is absolutely beautiful and is as full as can be of adorable toy patterns {this issue is their 2nd anniversary issue and it's all toys...TOYS people!...darling knitted toys!...pure summer knitting fun!...love!}, in addition to all the toy cuteness there are lots of great reviews, articles and interviews included in this bigger-than-ever issue.
Here is a shot of Angela, Allegra and me right before leaving the conference {sadly we had already said our goodbyes to Brandy}.

There was a lovely dinner with the good folks from Wiley, along with some of the other Wiley authors at the conference—the incomparable Carol Feller of Stolen Stitches {I cannot wait to get my hands on her soon to be released Contemporary Irish Knits}, Kristi Porter with more Knitting in the Sun goodness, and Melissa Morgan-Oakes with her new book on circular knitting.
And there was swag, and book signings {can't wait to dive into the projects from these beautiful books}, and goodies galore!...
I met scores of amazing women, saw countless skeins of gorgeous yarn, and left the conference even more convinced than ever that knitters really are some of the nicest, most generous people on the planet.  Phew!...quite the weekend!  And now I'm home again, back with my loves, with summer in full swing and with my head swimming from all of the inspiration of last weekend. I'm looking forward to taking all of that knitterly magic with me right into the heart of summer...
Mmmm...

~xox
alison

Phoning it in...

Hello there,
I'm going to be trying a little experiment here on my poor languishing blog...posting via my iPhone. Despite countless good intentions and I-want-to-blog-that moments, I haven't, for various reasons, made my way to the computer. I have, however been tweeting {by phone} more than ever {and loving it}. So after much lamenting and with some much appreciated help and a gentle nudge from my DH, I have decided to try a new approach. With the aid of my trusty iPhone, I'm hoping to make short, little posts here and there that capture a moment of my day. So what am I doing today?
Knitting {try to contain your surprise}...


...a little lace in the round...mmmm {variations of a pattern that I'm hoping to release this summer}.
And this...


...facing my nemesis. I kind of love these little guys~from perky yellow flower to fluffy puff ball, and good in a salad to boot~but oh what they do to my garden! How can something so whimsical be so pernicious? Go figure.
...And so my friends, the experiment begins! Fingers crossed!
tah-tah for now!
~xoxo
Alison
ps~okay not such a short post~need to work on that ; )
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

crush...

hi there,

Back with another weaverly post.  I'll be back to knitterly posting soon, but in the meantime...I've been doing some experimenting, and I want to introduce you to my new love...
Okay, I know it's a bit funky. It may even the kind of thing that only a weaver could love.  But I do—I love it.  It's felted merino wool and recycled sari silk {the thrums (loom waste) from weaving sari fabric in a textile mill in Nepal are collected and spun together to make this yarn}.  The yarn I used here has been around a while.  I bought over a decade ago and loved it, but it was really overspun, almost elastic, and was utterly unusable as a knitting yarn.  So when I decided to use it for this project I gave it  a backward trip through my spinning wheel and "unspun" it a little {maybe a little too much—hence the wooly texture of it here}.

It really is a work in progress, but I kind of love it.  I've been wearing for two days straight to see how it holds up.  The fabric is soft and warm and makes me smile every time I catch a glimpse of it in a window or mirror.  You can't tell here, but it's actually a little lacey.  And the colors...they just sing and shimmer.  These pictures do not do that sari silk justice.  It really does just glow.  And can I say how much I love the symmetry of weaving with a yarn that was once on a loom halfway across the world?...love.
The night it came off the loom I was convinced it was a disaster.  I was sitting at our coffee table with a fork in hand trying {with no success} to will the thing into submission—never a good sign when you take cutlery to your weaving at midnight.  I really was ready to bundle the whole thing up and pitch it.  But in the morning I decided to forge ahead and felt it...just to see what it would become, and voila!...love...
 ...pure unadulterated, unapologetic adoration.

Note to self...two things...
nothing looks good when it's midnight, you have a fork in your hand and no cake before you,
and two... that it's not done until it's done. 
Sorry for all of the pictures.  I went a little crazy trying to capture all of those colors.

Hope you have a great weekend, full of fun projects and happy surprises!

~xoxo
alison

ps~ If you want a pdf of the pattern for the Libernating Mitts {that I blogged last week}you can download it here.

Having it all...

I grew up with the firm belief that I could have it all...everything my heart desired was mine if I wanted it badly enough and if I worked hard enough to get it.  At the time I thought of having it all in terms of family and career, but as I've gotten older, I've realized that I have so internalized that belief that it extends to all facets of my life.  This is a good thing~mostly~but it can also lead to some frustration and to some hard bumps with reality.  I mean it seems like, I should be able to design knitting patterns, homeschool, maintain my weaving business, cook all of our food from scratch, make our clothes, teach, read, be socially active, play with family and friends, exercise daily, take classes, repair and keep a picture-perfect house, and~here's the kicker~be spontaneous at all times.  I should be able to keep all of those plates spinning at the same time, right?...apparently not.  Now, I'm not saying it can't be done.  I  firmly believe that there are some high-energy souls out there who manage all of this and more~my visits in blogland reinforce this believe and constantly inspire me~but I'm just not that girl. 
My dear mother has a maxim...you can't have a clean house and a productive sewing table at the same time.  I'm so grateful for that {on recollection though, I think she did, in fact, manage both}.  But what a gift she gives me when she tells me that, and how often do I need to hear it.  It reminds me that I can have it all, but maybe not all of it at the same time.
Weaving is part of my "all" and it has been a missing part.  When I was working on my book a few things had to take a back seat.  My loom was pushed off to the side in the push to get the designs knitted and the book written.  After the book was done it seemed like there were lots of loose ends to take care of...so still no weaving.  I was waiting for the ideal time...a time when everything would be perfect and nothing would have to slide for me to incorporate weaving back into my life.  I knew that once that loom was open, it would call to me.  And so it has.  Over the last week or so, I've decided to make peace with my dust bunnies and incomplete home repairs, to take some time to get reacquainted with an old friend.
first this...
then this...
then a bit more...

It feels so good to be reunited with my loom.  And even if I am a little rusty and my house is...well, a little more than messy...I am happy, the ideas are flowing, and my fingers are itchy for more.  What could be better?  Here's to having it all...one piece at a time.

Happy Monday! 

~xoxo~
alison

Absent~minded...

Absent?...yes. On my mind?...always...

Back again, after what seems like a very long time. I guess that's what happens when a day turns into a week, and then into months.   I wish I had some really fantastic reason for the lapse in posting, but I don't.  I can't even precisely pin down what happened except that somehow life just got the better of me.  I've missed this space so much and have missed my time visiting other spaces.  I've written dozens of posts in my head, while stirring pots, knitting, driving, etc. and have spent many moments wondering what all of you creative souls out there in the ether have been up to and how you were doing.

 So why haven't I been here?  As the days collected I think I had a bit of a hump to get over and I began to feel self-conscious on top of it—you know, like you do when you haven't sent a note or haven't called someone—not because you didn't want to or were trying to avoid it but because you wanted the perfect moment to devote to it—one without distractions—and then the days get filled and it just doesn't happen {at least that's how it goes in my world}.  Once that happens I feel bad and convince myself that I can't ring the doorbell without a gift or peace offering of sorts, which means, of course, that I have to come up with an idea and make the gift—the perfect gift—insert delay here.  So there it is.  That's how hours turn to days, days to weeks, weeks to months, and months to seasons, until I find yourself in a whole new year. And because I can't bring you a plate of cookies or brownies as a peace offering and because I've decided that some little far-from-perfect-something is much better than absence and nothing, I've brought some knitting instead—a little bit of instant gratification knitting from me to you—just my way of saying that I've missed you.

Libernating Mitts

{library + hibernate = libernate}

Quick, easy and totally reversible, they sport...

cables on one side...

ribbing on the other..

.

I originally made these mitts for my daughter as part of a college care package.  I thought it might be nice for her to have something cozy and mama-made to wear during those long nights of paper writing and studying for finals.  The name came from a tweet she made about going to the library to "libernate".  I fell in love with the word, and made these mitts with images of her libernating in my head and heart. 

Of course once hers were off the needles, the boys needed some too, and then making some for me and sharing the pattern with you seemed only right.  So four pairs later, here they are, Libernating Mitts in three sizes...

Size/Hand Circumference:

Small—5 to 6 1/2", Medium—6 1/2 to 8", Large—8 to 9 1/2" 

Finished Circumference Before Stretching:

Small—5", Medium—5 1/2", Large—6"

Length: 

As desired

Note:

  These mitts are very stretchy and can accommodate a range of sizes.  Make yours as you like them, snug or roomy.

Gauge:

  23 stitches = 4" in stockinette stitch using US 5/3.75mm double point needles

Yarn: 

Cascade 220 Superwash or similar worsted weight yarn

Needles: 

US 5/3.75 double point needles or size needed to attain gauge

The Pattern

Cast on 36 (44, 48) stitches.  Divide as evenly as possible on 3 or 4 double point needles and join in the round being careful not twist stitches.  Place a marker after the first stitch of the round so that you will know where the round begins and ends.

Rounds 1-3:

  *K2, p2; repeat from * around.

Round 4:

  *Knit into the first two stitches as if you were going to knit 2 together but do not slide the stitches off of the left needle, instead insert the tip of the right hand needle between the 2 stitches just knitted together, and knit into the first stitch on the left needle again, slide both stitches off of the left needle together (you now have 2 stitches on the right needle). Purl 2.  Repeat from * around.

Repeat Rounds 1-4 until you have reached the desired length to the thumbhole ending with Round 4.  Make your mitts as long or as short as you like.

Make Thumbhole

Knit the first two stitches of the round.  Bring the yarn forward as if to purl, slip the next stitch purlwise from the left to the right needle, move the yarn to the back of the work.  *Slip the next stitch purlwise from the left to the right needle, pass the second stitch on the right needle over the first stitch as if to bind off.  Repeat from * 5 (6, 7) times for a total of 6 (7, 8) bound off stitches.  Slip the last bound off stitch from the right needle back to the left needle.  Turn the work.  Using the cable cast on, cast on 7 (8, 9) stitches.  Turn work.  Slip the first stitch on the left needle over to the right needle and pass the extra cast-on stitch on the right needle over it to close the buttonhole.  Resume knitting the rest of the round in Round 1 of the pattern.

Continue in pattern until your mitt is the length desired ending with Round 4 of pattern.  The sample mitts have 4 (4, 6) pattern repeats from the beginning of the buttonhole.  Bind off in pattern.

Finishing

Reinforce thumbhole if desired by working buttonhole stitch or crochet edge around the thumbhole opening. 

Buttonhole Stitch:

  Thread a 20” length of yarn on a tapestry needle. Begin at the lower right hand side of the thumbhole, with the cable side of the mitt facing you.  Leaving a tail long enough to weave in later, anchor the yarn by inserting the tapestry needle through a stitch on the rib side of the work.  Bring the tapestry needle up through the piece from the rib side of the work to the cable side.  Insert the needle down into the knitting, coming out through the thumbhole opening. As you pull the stitch through, a loop will be formed on the top of your work.  Bring the tapestry needle up through the loop as you tighten the stitch.  Continue in this manner across the lower thumb opening.  When you reach the end of the lower thumbhole, turn the work, and continue across the top of the thumbhole (cable side of work still facing you).  Once you have worked your way across the top of the thumb opening, turn and join the first and last stitch.  Weave in and trim all ends.

Hope you enjoy making and wearing these easy peasy mitts! As you can see, I've been wearing a pair pretty much nonstop this snowy winter. 

I love how snug they are and that they don't get in the way but still keep the chill off.

...and you know what they say, warm hands~warm heart...btw, why do they say that anyway?...anyway...Happy knitting!

~xoxo~

alison 

On Homecomings and Monster Mitts...

Home again, home again, jiggity jog!...You didn't honestly think that I wouldn't tell you all about the Family Weekend visit with our new college girl, did you?...Well, I'm happy to say that we {the lad and I} had a completely wonderful visit.  I'm afraid that in our haste to get out the door, I managed to leave my camera at home, but this is view out of the back seat window as we crossed the mighty Mississippi...
{taken with my phone by the lad, who I must say, is the most amazing travel companion ever—an 11 hour drive with 3 stops on the way and only 2 on the way home—incredible!}, and this is the color that the sky was the entire weekend...gorgeous.  Needless to say, we had a great time.
I can't express how much joy seeing my girl in her new world gave me {it helps that she is thriving and is soooo happy where she is}.  What is it about seeing the tiniest and most mundane details of where she is that makes my heart a little calmer?  I'm resting a little easier now that I can picture the path that she walks to class and see in my mind's eye the stairs that she climbs to get to her favorite floor in the library, etc.  Sigh...It's an amazing thing we mamas get to do...watching these little souls grow and discover and then, with held breath {and not a few tears} watching them fly away.  I feel very lucky and full right now, and a little like we have joined this great club together.  That surprised me.  I remember how it felt when I became a mom...like I had just been inducted into the most amazing society ever and that nothing but the experience of it could ever prepare me for how motherhood would really feel.  Loving her and letting her stretch her wings feels a little like that in some strange way...like we have turned a corner and we are still here, in a new place, but here all the same, that distance hasn't diminished our relationship but has maybe added a new dimension to it, and I know from my friendship with my own mother that it can be as rich and precious and fun as ever.  All this said, I still miss having her here and can't wait until I get to see her smile across the table again...and yes, I will cry big tears when she leaves, but it will be a little different the next time knowing that she loves where she is going and that she is living and thriving and becoming...makes me very happy and full indeed!

And now on a different note...  
Just in time for Halloween...the look of creativity in our house...
...pretty scary,right?!

Thankfully, there has been a little knitting here and there too...I've finished a sweater or two {more on those another day} and this morning there were these...a pair of make them in a minute Monster Mitts for the lad!...
These are really and truly a quick, quick knit.  How fast?..you're done before the end of a movie, swim meet, tap class, etc.  I used a bit of old novelty yarn {left-overs from the year when my girl made furry scarves for all of her friends for the holidays}.  These mitts took less than one skein and were literally done in a twinkling.  They are so easy, I hardly even consider this a pattern, but here's the recipe just in case you want to give them a go...
Pattern Notes:  I used a bulky weight, fluffy (eyelash) novelty yarn for these mitts.  They are worked in the round in stockinette stitch and I used a needle that is substantially smaller than that recommended on the yarn ball band.  The suggested gauge for the yarn that I used is 3 stitches to the inch on a size 10.5 needle.  I used a size 6 needle to get a gauge around 4 3/4 to 5 stitches per inch.  The resulting fabric is thick, soft and doesn't curl.  The look and the fit of the Monster Mitt is created by knitting your bulky, fuzzy yarn at a gauge that is much more dense than would be used normally (ie. for a scarf or sweater)—that's what makes them so furry and keeps them from curling.
Yarn:  Any bulky weight, fuzzy yarn that you have hanging around (or you can double up a couple of finer yarns to  achieve the desired gauge)—I used 1 skein of Lana Gatto Amsterdam (71yds (65m) per 1 3/4 oz (50g) skein.  As an alternative, you could use a double strand of a couple of finer yarns to  achieve the desired gauge.
Needles: US size 6 double point needles or size needed to attain gauge
Gauge: 19 stitches equals 4" (10cm)—about 4 3/4 sts/inch—row gauge isn't important as we will be working with measurements, not row numbers
Finished Measurements:  
Length from wrist hem to finger opening: 6 1/2" (16 1/2 cm)
Width (measured flat): 3 1/4" (8 1/2 cm)
Circumference (not stretched):  6 1/2" (16 1/2 cm)
Sample Size: Child  8 and up/Small Adult.  These mitts fit both me and my almost 11 year old son. 
To make these mitts in another size: 
1)  Measure your hand circumference (over the knuckles but not including the thumb)
2)  Subtract 1/2" (1 1/2 cm)
Multiply the number you ended up with after step 2 by your gauge (in stitches per inch).  This will give you the number needed to cast on.
Instructions:
Cast on 30 sts (or number of stitches needed for your size and yarn) 
Place a marker and join work in the round.  Knit 4 1/2" or for desired length slipping the marker as you go.  This will be the section of the mitt from the wrist hem to thumb base (along the inside of hand by the index finger).  Measure from the inside curve of your thumb down the wrist to get your desired length.  You can make these as long or as short as you desire.
Making the thumb hole:  Once your mitt is the length desired to the thumb, you will begin the thumb hole.  Bind off the first 5 sts on the next round.  If these mitts are for a larger or smaller hand you may need to bind off more or fewer stitches—to determine the number needed multiply your gauge per inch by the width of the thumb—the result will be the number of stitches to bind off).  Knit to the end of the round.  Slip marker.  At the beginning of the next round, cast on 5 sts (or the number of stitches bound off in the previous round).  You can use your favorite cast on method—a backward loop cast on or you can turn the mitts around and use a cable cast on—either way works. 
Continue to knit in the round for 1" or until you have reached the desired length from the thumb hole to the base of the fingers, slipping the marker as you go.
Finishing:  Bind off all stitches.  Weave in all ends.  Wear and scare!
Monster Mitt Update:  The lad wore these all afternoon and loved them!...And as for me...they are a great little stash buster—they were on and off the needles so fast that I can see myself making lots of puppy paws, kitty legs, mouse mitts, and bear claws in the coming days...fun, fun, fun!


Happy, happy Halloween!!!...

~xoxo
alison